Whereas 2007 is the 200th anniversary of the founding of
Congressional Cemetery;

Whereas Congressional Cemetery, first called the
Washington Parish Burial Ground, was founded in 1807 near the banks of the
Anacostia River in the District of Columbia and served the new federal city and
a young America as its first unofficial national cemetery, predating Arlington
National Cemetery by 70 years;

Whereas Congress was the primary developer of the cemetery
through appropriations for road grading, fencing, building of the Public Vault
and its Slate Path, and construction of the original Gatehouse, and Congress
ultimately attached its name to the burial ground as early as the 1830’s,
referring to it as Congressional Cemetery;

Whereas within months of the establishment of the
cemetery, the first burial of a Member of Congress took place when Senator
Uriah Tracey (CT) died in Washington on July 19, 1807, and was interred the
following day;

Whereas there are 19 Senators and 71 Representatives
interred at Congressional Cemetery, and its cenotaphs, designed by second
Architect of the Capitol Benjamin Latrobe, mark 165 sites to honor Members of
Congress who died in office;

Whereas among those who have been buried at Congressional
Cemetery are Vice Presidents George Clinton and Elbridge Gerry; Tobias Lear,
personal secretary to George Washington; Commodore Thomas Tingey, first
commandant of the Washington Navy Yard; William Wirt and William Pinckney,
Attorneys General of the United States; Generals Jacob J. Brown and Alexander
Macomb of the U.S. Army; General Archibald Henderson, longest-serving
Commandant of the Marine Corps; Dr. William Thornton, who originally designed
the United States Capitol and was the first Architect of the Capitol; George
Watterston, third Librarian of Congress; Robert Mills, architect of the
Washington Monument, the Department of Treasury Building, the Old Post Office,
and the original U.S. Patent Office Building (current home of the National
Museum of American Art and National Portrait Gallery); Philip P. Barbour,
Speaker of the House of Representatives and Associate Justice of the Supreme
Court; and 10 mayors of the City of Washington;

Whereas several prominent Native Americans who died while
in Washington were buried at Congressional Cemetery, including Push-Ma-Ta-Ha,
Chief of the Choctaws and a Brigadier General of the U.S. Army, and Kan Ya Tu
Duta (or Scarlet Crow), a delegate of the Dakota Sioux;

Whereas among other significant figures in American
history who are interred at Congressional Cemetery are Belva Lockwood, the
first woman to practice law before the Supreme Court; conductor and composer
John Philip Sousa; Adelaide Johnson, suffragette and sculptor of the
Portrait Monument to Lucretia Mott, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, and
Susan B. Anthony in the Rotunda of the Capitol; Civil War photographer Matthew
Brady; silent film star Mary Fuller; and FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover;

Whereas the Congressional Cemetery was placed on the
National Register of Historic Places on June 23, 1969;

Whereas the National Trust for Historic Preservation named
Congressional Cemetery one of the 11 most endangered historical sites in
America on June 16, 1997;

Whereas for over 30 years the cemetery has been managed by
the nonprofit Association for the Preservation of Historic Congressional
Cemetery, whose mission is to preserve, interpret, and honor this national
treasure, significant District of Columbia landmark, and unique Capitol Hill
asset; and

Whereas by working with community volunteers such as the
Congressional Cemetery Dogwalkers Club, as well as with the Department of
Veterans Affairs, the National Park Service, the Navy, and the Joint Military
District of Washington, the Association for the Preservation of Historic
Congressional Cemetery has made significant improvements to the cemetery: Now,
therefore, be it

That on the 200th anniversary of the
founding of Congressional Cemetery, the House of Representatives recognizes and
honors the cultural and historical importance of Congressional Cemetery and the
value of protecting and restoring this national treasure.